Defining the most import hygiene rules in the kitchen is really a task of listing the most general rules of the kitchen. Each rule will have specifics that everyone needs to know. But here's one list
What follows are thoughts from other contributors:
PERSONAL HYGIENE
1. wash hands with warm soapy water
2. tie hair back and cover where required or appropriate
3. don't wear make up or nail polish
4. always remove watches, jewelery, etc. before cooking
5. if wearing shirt button up cufflings
6. don't wear open-toed shoes (more of a workplace safety issue)
7. wear an apron to protect your clothes. Change aprons when they get dirty.
8. if you have a cut put on blue plaster (no foods are blue)
KITCHEN HYGIENE
1. make sure surfaces are clean and sanitary
2. all your equipment and utensils are clean and dry
3. your sinks are clean and sanitary
4. bins not over flowing
5. floor is not wet (splash becomes source of contamination)
6. cookers are clean
7.dont use out of date food
8. don't chop raw meat and other food on the same chopping board
9. always wash food before cooking
10. keep your cooking area tidy
11. make sure that you use clean utensils for each type of food that you work with
12. don't keep meat so long out of the freezer
13. don't sneeze or cough on the food
14. wash vegetables before cooking
15. if you put a spoon in food and lick it then don't put it back in the food
Wash hands before any contact with food if you sneeze always cover your mouth and turn away from the food and then wash your hands no smoking inside if something is spilt always clear it up straight away always wash surfaces straight after contact with raw meet.
1: ALWAYS wash your hands
2: If you have long hair, tie it up and pull your hair back.
3: Wear an apron because you don't want to ruin your clothes. [Note: Aprons are for protecting the food from your clothes. You can't take your clothes off when you go to the bathroom. You can and should remove the apron on breaks. Aprons are also easily changed when they become dirty.]
4: Don't eat any of the food mixture until finished, if you do, wash your hands again.
5: Sneeze AWAY from the food, as well as coughing.
6: ALWAYS wash the food before cooking.
7: ALWAYS check the food before you buy it.
Basically the rules of food hygiene are common sense rules to stop contamination of food while preparing or serving it. Remember, cooking food kills most germs. If you aren't going to cook it yourself before eating it then you have to store it carefully and make sure the way you prepare it is clean. Make sure it has few chances of encountering raw food, especially raw protein like meat which bacteria thrive on.
If food is not going to be cooked before you serve it - like cooked meats, cheese, cakes etc then you should store them on the top shelves of your fridge so no contaminants can drop onto them. You shouldn't cut these food stuffs with any knife that has been used on raw meat (unless it's been washed properly - rinsing under the tap won't do unless your tap spews boiling water). Ideally you should use different knives and chopping boards for raw meat and everything else.
Finally, ALWAYS wash your hands after putting something in the bin/trash. It's easy to forget, I know. Especially when trimming and peeling vegetables. My kitchen bin is host to microbes that feed on chicken skin, old cat food, veggie peelings, leftovers and everything. It's a hot bed of microbe reproduction activity. I bet yours is pretty similar! If my hands go to the bin I make sure my next stop is a good hand washing. You don't need to waste money on antibacterial soap, normal soap does the job just as well. And it's better that the germs get washed down the sink than transferred to your lovely green salad!
The four golden rules are
1. All handles of pots and pans should be turned inward.
2. Remain near the stove when cooking with high temperatures to monitor the food and absolutely when children are in the house.
3. Have a kitchen fire extinguisher handy.
4. Use timers to remind yourself that food is cooking on the stove to prevent burning and possible fires.
5. Never pick up a pot on fire. Cover it with a pot lid or cover. Immediately turn off heat and if possible remove from heat source. Salt is good for stopping smoke in an oven.
6. Never use towels or cloths for a pot holder lest they catch on fire when draping over heating elements.
7. Dont touch something electric with wet hands to prevent electric shocks !!
Don't play near any hot items!
Don't stick metal in the toaster!
If you can't handle the heat, get out of the kitchen.
10 answers for a hygiene kitchen
Hygiene risk is the risk of bad hygiene in a kitchen and environment
kitchen hygiene is all about keeping your kitchen clean and less conjused with things that carry bacteria and germs
The standard of hygiene require that the kitchen and its utensils should be kept clean at all times.
The duration of My Kitchen Rules is 3120.0 seconds.
Personal hygiene has to do with hygiene about yourself, clean hands, etc... Enviromental hygiene has to do with hygiene around your work area (kitchen area), rats, mould, etc...
My Kitchen Rules was created on 2010-02-01.
The my kitchen rules won Dan and Steph.
food hygiene
Who my kitchen rules in 2010 does not make sense and if it means who was on my kitchen rules i do not remember but i remember that pete evans was really sucky and manu was great
the first team eliminated in my kitchen rules was Emma and Andrew.
My Kitchen Rules - 2010 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:PG
Hygiene is one thing homeless people struggle with. The food hygiene in the kitchen was so bad the health department closed the restaurant.